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Viewing 241–270 of 333 results.
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On the Trail—to Freedom?
Touring the palimpsests of cities.
by
Charlie Riggs
via
The Hedgehog Review
on
November 1, 2023
partner
The Right-Wing Textbooks Shaping What Americans Know
Conservative curricula are being pushed into tax-funded history classrooms.
by
Adam Laats
via
Made By History
on
October 11, 2023
We Are Not Alone: 50 Years of Ms. Magazine
Gloria Steinem on the making of America's first feminist publication.
by
Gloria Steinem
via
Literary Hub
on
September 20, 2023
What Emily Dickinson Left Behind
The winding story of how a trove of 8,000 of the poet’s family objects were saved.
by
Martha Ackmann
via
The Atlantic
on
September 20, 2023
Fighting Words: The Pamphlets of a Democratic Revolution
To judge from the Concord collection, the public forum of antebellum America was no model of democratic deliberation.
by
Robert A. Gross
via
Commonplace
on
September 19, 2023
How Stanley Kubrick’s Spartacus Broke the Hollywood Blacklists
The 1960 film was penned by two blacklisted Communist writers. Its arrival in theaters was a middle finger to the McCarthyist witch hunt in Hollywood.
by
Taylor Dorrell
via
Jacobin
on
September 14, 2023
The Man Who Became Uncle Tom
Harriet Beecher Stowe said that Josiah Henson’s life had inspired her most famous character. But Henson longed to be recognized by his own name.
by
Clint Smith
via
The Atlantic
on
September 8, 2023
Possibilities for Propaganda
The founding and funding of conservative media on college campuses in the 1960s.
by
Lauren Lassabe Shepherd
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
August 30, 2023
A Christmas Carol In Nineteenth-Century America, 1844-1870
What were Americans' immediate responses to "A Christmas Carol," and how did Dickens' reading tours and eventual death reshape its meaning?
by
Thomas Ruys Smith
via
Comparative American Studies
on
July 27, 2023
Wake Up and Smell the Coffee
Meet the feuding twin sisters who popularized the American advice column.
by
Leopold Froehlich
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
July 24, 2023
Howard Zinn and the Politics of Popular History
The controversial historian drew criticism from both left and right. We need more like him today.
by
Nick Witham
via
The Chronicle of Higher Education
on
July 17, 2023
The Writers Who Went Undercover to Show America Its Ugly Side
In the 1940s, a series of books tried to use the conventions of detective fiction to expose the degree of prejudice in postwar America.
by
Samuel G. Freedman
via
The Atlantic
on
July 10, 2023
The Peculiar Game of the Yankee Peddler—Or What Do You Buy?
Part of the utility of the game is how many intersections can be addressed, a Choose Your Own Adventure of lesson planning.
by
Rachel Tamar Van
via
Commonplace
on
July 4, 2023
The Invention of Objectivity
The view from nowhere came from somewhere.
by
Darrell Hartman
via
The Atlantic
on
June 3, 2023
The Gumshoes Who Took On the Klan
In the pages of "Black Mask" magazine, the Continental Op and Race Williams fought the KKK even as they shared its love of vigilante justice.
by
Matthew Wills
via
JSTOR Daily
on
May 24, 2023
The Sunday Funnies’ Colorful History
Look closely—very closely—at a Sunday comic strip in a printed newspaper.
by
Glenn Fleishman
via
The Nib
on
May 18, 2023
President Wilson on the Couch
What happened when a diplomat teamed up with Sigmund Freud to analyse the president?
by
Nick Haslam
via
Inside Story
on
May 16, 2023
Traffic Jam
Ben Smith’s book on the history of the viral internet doesn’t truly reckon with the costs of traffic worship.
by
Leah Finnegan
via
The Baffler
on
May 2, 2023
“H.H.C.”: The Story of a Queer Life—Glimpsed, Lost, and Finally Found
My hunt for one man across the lonely expanse of the queer past ended in a place I never expected.
by
Aaron Lecklider
via
Slate
on
April 24, 2023
Jay Jackson’s Audacious Comics
Written during World War II, Bungleton Green and the Mystic Commandos imagined a future liberated from racism and inequality.
by
Jeet Heer
via
The Nation
on
February 23, 2023
partner
Conservatives Want To Control What Kids Learn, But It May Backfire
Conservatives want to make students patriotic. Instead, they exacerbate historical illiteracy.
by
Adam Laats
via
Made By History
on
February 7, 2023
Structures of Belonging and Nonbelonging
A Spanish-language pamphlet by Cotton Mather explodes the Black-versus-white binary that dominates most discussions of race in our time.
by
Joseph Rezek
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
February 1, 2023
partner
The Shared Religious Roots of Twin Insurrections in the U.S. and Brazil
Americans helped spread a right-wing version of evangelical Christianity in Brazil. Now it has played a role in an insurrection.
by
Raimundo Barreto
,
João B. Chaves
via
Made By History
on
January 18, 2023
The Pioneering Black Sci-Fi Writer Behind the Original Wakanda
Pauline Elizabeth Hopkins invented the setting that eventually became Wakanda in her science fiction, but her name isn't widely known.
by
Alison Lanier
via
Ms. Magazine
on
November 23, 2022
Edgar Allan Poe: Pioneering Mollusk Scientist
Poe’s work reminds us that the separation of “Arts” and “Sciences” into discrete discourses of knowledge is itself a quite recent invention.
by
James D. Lilley
via
Commonplace
on
November 1, 2022
The New History Wars
Inside the strife set off by an essay from the president of the American Historical Association.
by
David Frum
via
The Atlantic
on
October 30, 2022
Does Science Need History?
Why the history of science is of use to not only the sciences, but all branches of scholarship.
by
Lorraine Daston
,
Samuel Loncar
via
Marginalia Review of Books
on
October 28, 2022
partner
Isaac Sears and the Roots of America in New York
Like so many other reluctant revolutionaries in New York, he seemed the antithesis of the rabble in arms that the British identified with the mobocracy.
by
Sam Roberts
via
HNN
on
October 23, 2022
The Enduring Allure of Choose Your Own Adventure Books
How a best-selling series gave young readers a new sense of agency.
by
Leslie Jamison
via
The New Yorker
on
September 12, 2022
The Complicity of the Textbooks
A new book traces how the writing of American history, from Reconstruction on, has falsified and illuminated our racial past.
by
Eric Foner
via
New York Review of Books
on
September 5, 2022
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